Menu

AGENDA: Wednesday, November 6, 2019

07:30 AM

BREAKFAST & REGISTRATION

08:30 AM

Fostering Diversity and a Culture of Inclusion within Legal Leadership

There is a clear business case for expanding diversity within the ranks of an organization. Starting at the top: when 25% or more of management and/or board members are women, profit and retention of an organization rises. General counsel and in-house counsel can have a direct impact by not only fostering an inclusive culture within their department, but also by committing to hiring law firms that employ and promote women and minorities.

This panel will explore:

How to take advantage of the current landscape to create change

What individual counsel can do to affect organizational culture

The important role law firms play in improving legal diversity:

The impact on corporate diversity

More diverse partners & retention

Sandra Upegui
Senior Legal Counsel
Dufry

Janet Tacoronte
US & UK Legal Manager
Selina

Lorna Simms
Senior Director, Assistant General Counsel
Office Depot

09:15 AM

Dealing with Unconscious Bias & Discrimination

Whether discrimination comes from overt prejudice or unconscious bias, minorities and women are not receiving equal opportunities or treatment when it comes to landing in-house counsel positions, earning promotions, or making partner in a law firm. In fact, the impact of unconscious bias can be insidious and underestimated or rationalized too easily. How can lawyers identify their own unconscious biases and overcome discrimination when it affects them directly?

For many women and minorities in the legal field, tradition and culture often mean that they are the only woman or minority in the room or office. This can create many challenges, including underestimation, intimidation, stereotyping, and even condescension. Their opinion may be overlooked when discussing a case, they may be underpaid compared to equally qualified male/Caucasian lawyers, and their additional responsibilities to their family or community may go unrecognized.

This panel offers a micro-study for female and minority lawyers by offering insight into how to effectively self-advocate and create change in what has traditionally been a white male-dominated environment.

Nisha Bhatia
General Counsel
Pensam Residential

Janna Maland
Associate General Counsel
Banco Santander Bank

Leslie Fischer
Senior Legal Counsel
Ryder System, Inc.

10:45 AM

NETWORKING BREAK

11:25 AM

Sponsors, Influencers & Career Engineering for Legal Counsel

To create a rewarding legal career, one must seek out challenging and visible professional opportunities: getting on the right case, satisfying the important client, winning the big settlement. For women and minorities, however, finding these opportunities often isn’t enough; effective sponsors and influencers are needed to help seize them.

Behind closed doors, who is vouching for you and pushing your name forward for the opportunities you want? What can you do to strategically foster sponsors and influencers?

This panel will explore:

The importance of women and minorities in law

Differentiating sponsors from influencers

Redefining the “old boys network” in the legal profession

Identifying current and potential sponsors

Zamira Zapata Valdés
Vice President, General Counsel
DIAGEO

Margaret Richardson
General Counsel and Vice President
Anuvia

Kim Gerber
General Counsel (Supply Chain Division
Ryder System, Inc.

12:10 PM

Self-Advocacy & Countering Personal Negation When Advancing a Legal Career

By now it’s fairly common knowledge: Women often do not apply for a job if they don’t check every box, whereas men regularly seek jobs for which they are only partially qualified. This is no less true in the legal profession, and applies to landing an entry-level associate position all the way up to being promoted to general counsel or making partner.

The reality is, as you advance in your legal career, you very rarely have all the skills, experience and capabilities that a new post will require. Instead, pursuing growth opportunities requires the confidence to see your own potential and enlist the right mentor to develop the necessary commercial awareness, analytical skills or litigation experience on the job, rather than waiting until you’re “perfectly prepared.”

This panel will explore:

How to position current success and experience

Let your cases speak for you

Make your manager your advocate

Dealing with rejection – every “no” means you are closer to a “yes”

Utilizing peer groups to enhance confidence

Panelist success stories

Katherine Paisley
General Counsel & VP of Compliance
Exacta Systems

Carla Gonzalez Gerard
Associate General Counsel
The Sol Group Corporation

Female and minority deal-makers, litigators and leaders have overcome challenges, preconceptions and prejudices that can provide valuable insights and lessons learned. In the current landscape more opportunities for women and minorities could be opening up. What skills will you need to advance your legal career today and the future?

This panel will explore:

What new opportunities exist for women and minority lawyers, and are there any others on the horizon?

As you pursued your legal career, what obstacles and challenges did you face that surprised you?

What are the keys to gaining the best mix of work and personal/family life?

What do you notice as more women and minorities move into leadership roles at law firms and within corporations?

With less than 20% of female equity partners, law firms are under pressure to become more diverse. Combine that statistic with the fact that 52% of recent graduating classes are female and current associates are demanding change, and it is clear that law firms must transform or suffer consequences. What responsibility do both law firms and their clients have in creating a more diverse future?

This panel will explore:

What new opportunities exist for women and minority lawyers, and are there any others on the horizon?

As you pursued your legal career, what obstacles and challenges did you face that surprised you?

What are the keys to gaining the best mix of work and personal/family life?

What do you notice as more women and minorities move into leadership roles at law firms and within corporations?